Wikinews interviews team behind the 2,000th featured Wikipedia article

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Sunday, April 13, 2008

This week saw the English-language version of Wikipedia, the collaboratively written online encyclopedia, reach 2,000 featured articles with the inclusion of the article El Señor Presidente. Featured articles (FAs) meet Wikipedia's highest standards for quality, accuracy, neutrality, completeness, and style, and thus are considered the best articles on Wikipedia.

The Wikipedia team that carries out the assessment and quality control before conferring the status of featured articles promoted five articles to FA status at the same time: Walter de Coventre, Maximian, El Señor Presidente, Lord of the Universe, and Red-billed Chough. With five promoted at the same time, conferring the status of 2,000th on one is an arbitrary decision and in some respects any of these articles could actually make a claim to the honour.

The article El Señor Presidente was created and developed by a University of British Columbia class, "Murder, Madness, and Mayhem: Latin American Literature in Translation". While an important milestone, the 2,000th featured article is also symbolic of Wikipedia's growing role in the 21st century learning arena.

The professor of the class, Jon Beasley-Murray, began using Wikipedia as a collaborative space where his students could both do coursework and provide a type of virtual public service. Thus, he created a Wikipedia project, Murder Madness and Mayhem, that focussed on creating articles relating to the Latin American literature covered in his class. Not surprisingly, El Señor Presidente is considered one of the most important books in Latin American literature, written by Nobel Prize-winning Guatemalan writer, Miguel Ángel Asturias.

The Wikinews team contacted Prof. Beasley-Murray, who agreed to be interviewed for this story. His responses can be found below. Included are sections soliciting responses from three students who took the class and helped create and bring El Señor Presidente to Feature Article status. Thus far the project has created seven good articles in addition to the 2,000th featured article.

Murder Madness and Mayhem

Wikinews

Professor Beasley-Murray, thank you for giving us some of your valuable time and agreeing to talk to us. Can you give some background on what prompted you to start this project?

Jon Beasley-Murray, Professor, University of British Columbia
Image: Jon Beasley-Murray.
In short, however, I'd done some editing on Wikipedia a year ago. I'd got into that rather by accident--after finding to some surprise that some of my academic work had been written up at the site. I then spent some time trying to organize and expand articles and categories relating to Latin America, particularly Latin American culture, which is my area of expertise. I discovered that Wikipedia's coverage of this area was uneven at best. It was while I was involved in this that it came to me that students could usefully participate on the site. They use Wikipedia anyway; why not find ways in which they could also participate? And I'd come to realize that it's only by participating and contributing that you can really understand the Encyclopedia, both its strengths and its weaknesses but above all the way it comes to be how it is.
And I've always been interested in using technology in teaching: mailing lists, websites, blogs, and so on. But I've never much liked "educational technology": programs such as WebCT that students only ever use as part of a course they are taking. By creating something of an educational ghetto, educational technology seems to me to miss out on the most interesting and exciting possibilities of the Internet: precisely the fact that it opens up to the world outside the classroom, and can reconfigure or perhaps even break down the rather limited relationship between teacher (supposed to be the expert and source of all authority) and the student (too often treated as the passive recipient of knowledge).
Overall, a Wikipedia assignment offered lots of possibilities, including:
  • teaching students about Wikipedia, an important site that they use (and too often misuse) often
  • improving Wikipedia itself, by generating new content on topics where its coverage is lacking
  • encouraging students to produce something that had relevance outside the classroom, in the public sphere
  • giving them tangible goals that were measured by something other than my own professorial judgement
  • changing their views about writing, by stressing the importance of ongoing revision
  • teaching them about research and about how to use and evaluate sources
Cquote1.png ... we did get one "speedy deletion" tag. It was placed, within less than a minute, on an article that I created in front of all the students, during class time. For one horrible moment, in front of the whole class, I had a feeling that things might go terribly wrong. Cquote2.png

—Professor Jon Beasley-Murray

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png Did you consult with fellow academics or students prior to launching this project?

And in January, as the project was getting underway, I signed up with Wikipedia:School and university projects. There were plenty of other previous and ongoing educational projects listed there, so I presumed I wasn't so alone and that what I was doing wasn't so innovative. It was only much later that I realized just how different and how ambitious this project was: we were aiming to create featured articles, ideally twelve of them, and no other educational project had ever set out to do that!

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png I would assume the Wikipedia community was in favour of your project, did anyone outwith that community make notably critical comments about your idea?

I should mention, however, that it's not necessarily a given that the Wikipedia community was in favour. I've noticed that with some other educational projects, the initial reaction from Wikipedians has not always been so favourable. In part that's because students are encouraged to write a new article on anything they can come up with, and these are swiftly marked for deletion. In part that's because they write essays offline, then upload them, and naturally enough they are not in Wikipedia format or do not follow Wikipedia conventions (about "original research," for instance). Those articles are soon laden with tags, and their talk pages filled with warnings or reproaches. We managed to avoid that on the whole... mostly by accident! But we also avoided those problems, I think, because I'd spent a fair amount of time on Wikipedia already and was aware of some (but far from all) the habits of the site. And more importantly because we had quite definite aims: students weren't editing Wikipedia for the sake of it.
Even so, we did get one "speedy deletion" tag. It was placed, within less than a minute, on an article that I created in front of all the students, during class time. For one horrible moment, in front of the whole class, I had a feeling that things might go terribly wrong. The article tagged for speedy deletion was El Señor Presidente... which is now, as you know, Wikipedia's Feature Article number 2,000.

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png How significant a percentage of the mark you were giving for the class came from Wikipedia contributions?

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png As a member of the Wikimedia Foundation's communications committee I (Brian McNeil) frequently see both sides of the conflict over how relevant or reliable Wikipedia is. This ranges from queries coming in from students working on their school paper who want a response to their librarian and teachers effectively banning use of Wikipedia, to the other extreme such as a recent case where a teaching surgeon in the UK asking for permission to quote extensively from Wikipedia for a paper on the site's relevance and potential use for undergraduates in medicine. I have a stock answer detailing how to check Wikipedia sources; that Wikipedia is a great starting point for research, and that if you disallow Wikipedia you should disallow Britannica. Is this something you would agree with?

Before this semester, I explicitly banned students from quoting Wikipedia articles in their essays. And I will continue to do so. I also look askance at them citing dictionary definitions. And though they don't quote Britannica (I think Wikipedia has now for all intents and purposes replaced Britannica), I would likewise be unimpressed if they were to do so.
On the other hand, of course, as you say, Wikipedia can be an excellent starting point for research. I personally use it often precisely for that reason.

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png Was the experience of using a wiki for collaboration something you would repeat? There have been suggestions for something you might call "EduWiki" for the collaborative development of course material. Would you get involved with something like that? Do you see potential for use of the MediaWiki software in other areas of education? Such a project could be hosted under Wikimedia Foundation projects such as Wikibooks or Wikiversity. Would you favour that over a closed project within academia where contributors' credentials could be verified?

The other thing is that too many academics still don't get the wiki ethos. It's hard for them (us) not to be possessive about our work. This I think is what causes most of the antagonism and frustration when academics do get involved in Wikipedia. The issue is seldom "expertise," and much more often ownership. I realize I'm talking in broad strokes here, but for instance a wiki was set up in my faculty, and it proved impossible to edit anyone else's texts. We might as well have been putting up .pdfs. It was an exercise in presenting position papers, rather than in collaborative writing.
Meanwhile, as for the topic of credentials, which I know has been much debated on Wikipedia, I think that's a real canard. I don't think credentials matter much. My students don't have much in the way of credentials, but they've done superior work.

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png Would you describe your students as receptive to the idea of doing coursework where the general public could view their works in progress?

The other little guessing game concerned how many page views they thought their articles attracted per month. I can't remember exactly the figure they started off with in this case, but I can tell you it was a lot lower than the 50,000 plus that Gabriel García Márquez actually receives. When we figured out that that article must have something over 600,000 visits a year (I now reckon it's almost three-quarters of a million), the team who were editing that page were somewhat shocked. But my sense is that the realization was also rather exciting. And I know that the students who will shortly find their article on the mainpage of the English Wikipedia (it'll be there on May 5th) are absolutely thrilled. Though frankly I think they (and the other students) are less interested in the fact that the "general public" can see what they've done, than in telling their friends and family to take a look at their work.

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png Did any students fail to fit in and find themselves unable to work with Wikipedia?

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png Do you feel that doing this part of the course in such a radically open way encouraged any of the students to work to a higher standard than the might otherwise have?

An aerial view of the University of British Columbia campus and Pacific Spirit Park
Image: Geoff Barill.

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png In reflecting on the project, is there anything you would have done differently?

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png You've hit about 6,000 edits personally, have you caught the "wiki bug"? Will you keep editing?

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png In light of the apparent success of your project what would you say to other academics to try and persuade them to try similar experiments?

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png Before moving on to bringing your students into the discussion, I'd like to close with your thoughts on making this a regular part of the curriculum. Do you intend to do so? Do you feel other institutions should examine your project with a view to emulating it?

Good and Featured Articles

Members of the Murder Madness and Mayhem project on Wikipedia, successfully brought the article about the book El Señor Presidente to "Featured Article" status, as part of a University of British Columbia class assignment.
Image: The cover of the English translation, from Macmillan Press..
Wikinews

In addition to the one featured article, seven made "Good Article" status. How much of an encouragement was that to those of you involved in the project?

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png How long were you involved with Wikipedia before you really felt Good or Featured was achievable?

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png If you could improve the guidelines for people wanting to take articles up to Featured status, what would you change?

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png Do you feel that having anything you did immediately viewable by anyone on the Internet encouraged you to aim for a higher standard than you might have with a more conventional paper that only the professor would see?

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png Do you believe that contributing something to a 'digital commons' gives you more of a sense of achievement than just turning in a term paper?

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png Have you caught the "wiki bug"? Will you keep editing?

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png Assuming Professor Beasley-Murray repeats this project in subsequent years, what advice would you give to students following in your footsteps and starting on Wikipedia?

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png Which would you describe as the harder 'marking authority'? Other professors where you've submitted conventional term papers, or the teams assessing Wikipedia contributions with a view to awarding Good or Featured status?

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png Was there significant input from other Wikipedians not taking your course? If so, was this valuable?

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png As a fairly open-ended question, would you see any use for wiki technology in any of your other study areas, or even where you may hope to eventually end up in employment?

The 2,000th

Featured articles on Wikipedia are denoted by a bronze star in the upper right-hand corner of the article.
Wikinews

How did you feel when "El Señor Presidente" was made up to Featured Article (FA) status? Did you have a celebratory drink or a party?

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png Were you disappointed that more of your articles didn't make FA status?

Cquote1.png I think FAs [Ed: Featured Articles] deserve more credit in the academic community because they are excellent sources of information. Cquote2.png

—Katy Konyk

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png Was getting the article up to that status harder than you expected?

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png Does the lack of credit on Wikipedia concern you?

Monica (left) & Katy (right)
Image: Monica Freudenreich.

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png Academia is often characterised as "publish or die". Do you believe the educational establishment should embrace Wikipedia or wiki technology as a way of making this publishing requirement less onerous?

Wikinews waves Left.pngWNWikinews waves Right.png How has working on getting something to FA status changed your opinion of Wikipedia from that you held prior to the start of this project?

Wikinews

I'd like to thank you all for taking the time out of your busy schedules to help on this Wikinews article. Who knows? It too could end up featured.

Related news

Sources

Wikinews
This exclusive interview features first-hand journalism by a Wikinews reporter. See the collaboration page for more details.
Wikinews
This article is a featured article. It is considered one of the best works of the Wikinews community. See Wikinews:Featured articles for more information.


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